The home of Elisabeth and Dennis Dunker is located in Bohuslän, Sweden, read the full story in our April issue.
– How would you describe your interior style?
– Scandinavian, eclectic perhaps. With a touch of Japandi? Ever since childhood, I’ve always shopped second-hand, and I’m especially drawn to objects where the presence of the maker’s hand can be felt.
– What is most important in creating a good home?
– The people - they are absolutely what make a home. Otherwise, I appreciate calm and order. And not too many things.
Photo: @elisabethdunkerr
The home of Elisabeth and Dennis Dunker is located in Bohuslän, Sweden, about an hour from Gothenburg. Elisabeth works as a photographer and designer and is the founder of the design studio @finelittleday . Dennis is a physician (neurointerventionist), and the two met in the 90s when they were both working in the television industry.
Originally intended solely as a holiday home, the house is used by the couple much of the year. Idyllically situated in a rural setting, surrounded by forest and nature. The interior is a mix of traditional crafts, contemporary elements, vintage finds, and Elisabeth’s own designs, all set against a backdrop of oak veneer surfaces throughout.
—> full story in our April issue.
Photo: @elisabethdunkerr
Old memories, new materials and a color palette inspired by nature. Ane Weie Nilsen and Caspar Ramstad Heide live in Torshov, Oslo, in a 86-square-meter apartment meticulously planned and renovated by design studio Aula.
– We both work in front of a screen all day, and wanted to create a sense of nature and its colors in the apartment. Aula interviewed us in the beginning of the process, asking about memories of places in our lives that evoked positive emotions and associations. This has truly been reflected in our home, and is an approach that brings a sense of happiness every day.
—> full story in our April issue.
Photo: @pernillemunster
Old memories, new materials and a color palette inspired by nature. Ane Weie Nilsen and Caspar Ramstad Heide live in Torshov, Oslo, in a 86-square-meter apartment meticulously planned and renovated by design studio Aula.
– We both work in front of a screen all day, and wanted to create a sense of nature and its colors in the apartment. Aula interviewed us in the beginning of the process, asking about memories of places in our lives that evoked positive emotions and associations. This has truly been reflected in our home, and is an approach that brings a sense of happiness every day.
—> full story in our April issue.
Photo: @pernillemunster
A bit 70s, a bit late Scandinavian modernism, something new, and a few old classics. Ellen Østmoen and Kjetil Wold - entrepreneurs and owners of the design agencies ANTI and Kurated By - recently moved from a residential neighborhood in Hamar to Ullevålsveien in Oslo.
The 198-square-metre apartment has a kitchen and dining room on the first floor, with stucco detailing and large, light-filled rooms. The loft is designed by Atelier Oslo, where what was once an attic has been transformed into functional zones with living areas, a lounge, a bathroom and an additional bedroom tucked beneath the sloping ceiling.
—> full story in our February issue.
Photo: @annemeranda_photo
A bit 70s, a bit late Scandinavian modernism, something new, and a few old classics. Ellen Østmoen and Kjetil Wold - entrepreneurs and owners of the design agencies ANTI and Kurated By - recently moved from a residential neighborhood in Hamar to Ullevålsveien in Oslo.
The 198-square-metre apartment has a kitchen and dining room on the first floor, with stucco detailing and large, light-filled rooms. The loft is designed by Atelier Oslo, where what was once an attic has been transformed into functional zones with living areas, a lounge, a bathroom and an additional bedroom tucked beneath the sloping ceiling.
—> full story in our February issue.
Photo: @annemeranda_photo
Ceramic artist Helene Jørgensen and her family live just a couple of hundred meters from the Oslofjord in Sætre, Asker. Helene originally worked as a financial advisor, but got her professional certificate as a ceramicist six years ago. From her workshop and studio in the basement of her home she produces beautiful and functional products inspired by the Norwegian coastal nature and wabi-sabi philosophy.
—> full story in our February issue.
Photo: @fotografmfj
Styling: @martheberganosen
– We’re more interested in the feeling a home creates than with following a particular interior style. The choices we make are guided by function, personal taste and what works with the things we already own. Over time it has become a mix of objects we’ve collected, which together create a whole we feel comfortable in. For us, it’s more important that the home is personal and functional than that it fits into a specific category, Steffen Olsen and Erlend Tårnesvik Dreiås says.
—> full story about Steffen, Erlend and their dog Teddie in Grünerløkka, Oslo, in our February issue.
Photo: @thejnr
– We’re more interested in the feeling a home creates than with following a particular interior style. The choices we make are guided by function, personal taste and what works with the things we already own. Over time it has become a mix of objects we’ve collected, which together create a whole we feel comfortable in. For us, it’s more important that the home is personal and functional than that it fits into a specific category, Steffen Olsen and Erlend Tårnesvik Dreiås says.
—> full story about Steffen, Erlend and their dog Teddie in Grünerløkka, Oslo, in our February issue.
Photo: @thejnr
Located in Kallebäcks Terrasser, a newer urban development area east of Gothenburg, a somewhat mysterious structure appears among the surrounding modern residential buildings. A sculpturally shaped volume designed by Erdegard Arkitekter leads visitors down to an underground space carved into the rock. The façade is composed of specially designed metal cassettes, precisely bent and hydro-dipped in a pattern that creates the impression of a three-dimensional surface.
—> read more in our February issue
Photo: Anna Kristinsdóttir